Leeper v. Lemon G. Neely Co.

293 F. 967, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1704
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1923
DocketNo. 3738
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 293 F. 967 (Leeper v. Lemon G. Neely Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leeper v. Lemon G. Neely Co., 293 F. 967, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1704 (6th Cir. 1923).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

Appellants first contend that the Smith lease was a mere option and was void because unilateral. This court, in Raydure v. Lindley, 249 Fed. 675, 161 C. C. A. 585, upheld the validity of a lease the same as this in all particulars essential to this question. We are not pointed to any later Kentucky decisions which can disturb this conclusion. We are unable to see that there is in this respect any vital distinction between the ‘‘or” lease of the Raydure Case, and the “unless” lease which, in effect, this one may be. Only the most express decision by the Kentucky court as to the very point could require us to depart from the settled rule in this court, which is in accord with the Supreme Court of the United States and the great weight of authority, as pointed out in Raydure v. Lindley.

[970]*970 The Kentucky rule, first formulated in Monarch Co. v. Richardson, 124 Ky. 607, 99 S. W. 668, and recognized and applied by us in Lyon v. Union Co. (D. C.) 274 Fed. 957, which imports into every oil lease (at least, those made before March 18, 1920), even if for a definite term, a condition that it shall continue for only a reasonable time, unless by the lessor’s continuing consent, seems to remove every aspect of unfairness or one-sidedness that has sometimes been made the basis for claiming illegality. It is certainly a mistake to assume that there is necessarily no consideration, because only a nominal amount has been paid. Consideration may be found in burdens to the promisee as well as in benefits to the promisor. An oil company which makes large expenditures in development commonly does so, in part, because it has leases upon surrounding territory, which perhaps cannot reasonably be drilled without considerable delay, and successful development is an undoubted benefit to surrounding territory and sometimes even to territory relatively remote. The question of consideration cannot, in the typical case, be disposed of with reference only to. the one lease which happens to be in litigation.

Whether the Smith lease expired October 7, 1919, depends upon inferences from undisputed facts. Whether or not there was any express understanding in advance that rental's might be paid at the Monticello Bank, and that this name might be filled in the blank left in the original lease, it is undisputed that the two annual payments due October, 1917, and 1918, were thus made, and that each was accepted by and was satisfactory to the lessors. When Neely bought the lease from Smith, he examined the records in this bank and found that the last payment then due had been made and accepted through the bank in this way. Under these circumstances, and in the absence of any notice to the contrary, the lessors are plainly estopped to deny the bank’s agency to receive these payments for them. The payment now disputed was mailed from a town in Ohio to the bank on October 2, 1919, accompanied by a letter saying that it was for the purpose of this very payment to these lessors. Just when the bank received it is not clear, although it did not actually enter the amount as a credit on its books to the special account in which it carried such items until October 7th. Even though the payment was not made until October 7th, we think it was in time.

The general rule is that, where the computation of time is to be made from a particular date, that day is excluded. 26 R. C. L. 740, “Time,” § 18! That rule has been applied to the construction of oil leases (Thornton’s Oil & Gas, § 270; Eastern Co. v. Coulehan, 65 W. Va. 531, 64 S. E. 836; Plumber v. Southern Co., 185 Ky. 243, 214 S. W. 896), and we see no reason for doubting its applicability here.

Plaintiffs now say that a notice to develop was given by Dabney to the Neely Company and now claim forfeiture for nondevelopment under the rule of Monarch Co. v. Richardson, and Lyon v. Union Co., supra. There is no sufficient proof of any effective notice. A letter is said to have been sent, but according to the recollection of the attorney who wrote it for Dabney, it was a mere statement that no further rentals would be received and that the lease was at an end. It did not [971]*971meet at all the spirit of the Kentucky rule, which is that, before a lease can be terminated by the lessor, he must require the lessee to develop, giving reasonable opportunity therefor. The notice, here said to have been sent, seems to have been an arbitrary cancellation. In any event, the somewhat uncertain and vague evidence of its mailing does not raise a sufficient presumption to overcome the positive denial of its receipt by every person to vvhose attention it might naturally have come. See Hand & Johnson Co. v. Canada Lines (C. C. A. 6) 281 Fed. 779, 782.

The lease is peculiar, in that it purports to be for a term of one year, and then continues with provisions applicable only to one for a continuing term of years. Plaintiffs appeal to the canon of construction that, where there are inconsistent clauses in a contract, the earlier will prevail; but, as we point out in Hopkins v. Ziegler, 259 Fed. 43, 47, 170 C. C. A. 43, if this rule were always controlling, ambiguity because of conflicting clauses would disappear. Looking at this contract all together, and according to the method stated in Hopkins v. Ziegler, we are satisfied that it should be considered as for a term of one year and such extension thereof as might accrue from the performance of the annually recurring conditions thereinafter stated. Since there was no positive obligation on the lessee’s part to do anything after the first year, the provisions as to the later drilling or rental payments are in the nature of conditions rather than of covenants, and the lease therefor is practically of the “unless” class in spite of its “or” form; but that does not seem important in this connection, because these rental payments; were made annually in advance, and, even though they were conditions subsequent, they were duly performed. From these views it must follow that the Smith lease was in full force until October, 1920, unimpaired by anything yet mentioned.

The most serious question remains: When the controversy took its present form, in Smith’s part of the original lease, which the Neely Company produced from its files, the blank for place of payment had been filled in “at the Bank of Monticello” and the figure “1” before “years” had been changed to “20.” In view of the evidence and the conduct of the parties, we cannot doubt that the insertion of the place of payment was either authorized or ratified, and hence this cannot be deemed such an alteration as ought to prevent a court of equity from giving that relief to which' the party would otherwise be entitled. The change in the term cannot be so lightly treated. In an ordinary non-duplicate and unrecorded lease, such a change would be a forgery, and the party relying on such a changed instrument could have no relief whatever.

Defendants contend that this is not a material change, because under the Kentucky rule such a lease for a term of 20 years would be terminated at any time by demand for development, while under the rule of construction we have already approved this lease would continue for precisely the same indefinite term. We are not prepared to accept this view, even though the effect of the situation stated is to minimize the materiality of the change. If the term were 20 years, there would be an alternative covenant to pay the rental for 19 years unless there was [972]

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Bluebook (online)
293 F. 967, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leeper-v-lemon-g-neely-co-ca6-1923.